This fully-funded PhD provides dual-expertise training in the interdisciplinary environment of SynthSys, with experience at Simulistics Ltd.

Understanding the growth of a plant in a changing environment is demanding, because plant development and metabolism respond sensitively to the local conditions. We have linked Crop Science and Systems Biology approaches to understand whole-plant growth, in the first ‘Framework Model’ of the laboratory model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. The model predicts whole-plant biomass, from detailed molecular mechanisms, and was recently validated in independent experiments.

This project will develop the next-generation model, both as a tool for fundamental biology, and to enable synthetic biology designs that take account of the complex regulation in the plant host. You will be trained to use a range of cutting-edge models, building on the concrete example of our Framework Model. The model will be extended to represent larger, molecular networks that control biomass under a wider range of environmental conditions, with international collaborators and Simulistics’ Simile software. You will validate the model in new experiments, using Arabidopsis mutants and environmental control will test the model’s predictive power, and to disseminate the models in the international research community.